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Foundations and Trends® in Machine Learning > Vol 11 > Issue 2

An Introduction to Wishart Matrix Moments

By Adrian N. Bishop, University of Technology Sydney and CSIRO, Australia, adrian.bishop@uts.edu.au | Pierre Del Moral, INRIA, Bordeaux Research Center, France, pierre.del-moral@inria.fr | Angèle Niclas, École Normale Supérieure de Lyon, France

 
Suggested Citation
Adrian N. Bishop, Pierre Del Moral and Angèle Niclas (2018), "An Introduction to Wishart Matrix Moments", Foundations and Trends® in Machine Learning: Vol. 11: No. 2, pp 97-218. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/2200000072

Publication Date: 07 Dec 2018
© 2018 A. N. Bishop, P. Del Moral and A. Niclas
 
Subjects
Spectral methods,  Statistical/machine learning,  Information theory and statistics
 
Keywords
Wishart processesSample covariance matrices
 

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In this article:
1. Introduction
2. Some preliminary results
3. Matrix moment polynomial formulae
4. Laplace matrix transforms
5. Concentration and trace-type estimates
6. Proof of the main results
Appendix
References

Abstract

These lecture notes provide a comprehensive, self-contained introduction to the analysis of Wishart matrix moments. This study may act as an introduction to some particular aspects of random matrix theory, or as a self-contained exposition of Wishart matrix moments. Random matrix theory plays a central role in statistical physics, computational mathematics and engineering sciences, including data assimilation, signal processing, combinatorial optimization, compressed sensing, econometrics and mathematical finance, among numerous others. The mathematical foundations of the theory of random matrices lies at the intersection of combinatorics, non-commutative algebra, geometry, multivariate functional and spectral analysis, and of course statistics and probability theory. As a result, most of the classical topics in random matrix theory are technical, and mathematically difficult to penetrate for non-experts and regular users and practitioners. The technical aim of these notes is to review and extend some important results in random matrix theory in the specific context of real random Wishart matrices. This special class of Gaussian-type sample covariance matrix plays an important role in multivariate analysis and in statistical theory.We derive non-asymptotic formulae for the full matrix moments of real valued Wishart random matrices. As a corollary, we derive and extend a number of spectral and trace-type results for the case of non-isotropic Wishart random matrices. We also derive the full matrix moment analogues of some classic spectral and trace-type moment results. For example, we derive semi-circle and Marchencko–Pastur-type laws in the non-isotropic and full matrix cases. Laplace matrix transforms and matrix moment estimates are also studied, along with new spectral and trace concentration-type inequalities.

DOI:10.1561/2200000072
ISBN: 978-1-68083-506-9
134 pp. $90.00
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ISBN: 978-1-68083-507-6
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Table of contents:
1. Introduction
2. Some preliminary results
3. Matrix moment polynomial formulae
4. Laplace matrix transforms
5. Concentration and trace-type estimates
6. Proof of the main results
Appendix
References

An Introduction to Wishart Matrix Moments

Random matrix theory plays a central role in statistical physics, computational mathematics and engineering sciences, including data assimilation, signal processing, combinatorial optimization, compressed sensing, econometrics and mathematical finance, among numerous others. The mathematical foundations of the theory of random matrices are technical, and mathematically difficult to penetrate for non-experts, regular users and practitioners. This book reviews and extends some important results in random matrix theory in the specific context of real random Wishart matrices.

To overcome the complexity of the subject matter, the authors use a lecture note style to make the material accessible to a wide audience. This results in a comprehensive and self-contained introduction to the analysis of Wishart matrix moments. This study may act as an introduction to some particular aspects of random matrix theory, or as a self-contained exposition of Wishart matrix moments.

All researchers and students requiring an accessible introduction to the topic will find this book essential reading.

 
MAL-072